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104 THE LEAD EB, [No. 358, Saturday
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NAVAL AND MILITARY. The American Merchan...
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Our .Civilization J Sesssh&Ag Sfessses^ ...
but they one and all declined . Sir . Jarret , one of the relieving officers , also offered the parties tickets for labour in the workhouse , for -which labour they would have been paid according to their necessities and the number of their families ; but they refused to accept them , and marched off in a body . Mr . Elliott observed that he was not surprised or disappointed at the result , believing , as he did , that the object of the parties waa more display than actual want or a desire to seek
parochial assistance . Robbers' of Cows . —Five men have been charged at Worship-street with stealing four cows from the shed of a milkman in East-road , City-road . The value of the animals \ faa 90 J . ; and the shed had been broken into in the course of the night . The evidence of several witnesses fixed suspicion on all the accused , one of whom appears to have been the receiver ; but , as there was more doubt in his case than in that of the others , h , e was admitted to bail .
The Double Murder in Wal worth . —Mrs . Bacon has made further statements with respect to the guilt of her husband , from which it would appear that , after cutting the throats of the children , he endeavoured to strangle her . This is confirmed by the fact that her throat , when first she was taken into custody , presented livid marks as of the constriction of a rope . Amongst the articles found on Bacon at the time he was taken into custody was a square morocco case , containing the photographic likenesses of his murdered children as they lay in their coffins . This emblem he carried with him to Stamford , and showed to all his friends and acquaintances , always expressing great grief at their loss . - —Bacon and his wife were again examined at the Lambeth police office on Wednesday . Great indisposition to face the public was evinced by the man , and the woman showed an equal horror at being brought face to
face with her husband . The latter was therefore permitted to sit at the solicitors' table , with her back turned to Bacon ; and this position she maintained during the whole of the proceedings . The vacant and wandering look which distinguished her when first she was in custody has now given place to a settled look of misery . Her husband also seemed very dejected and apprehensive . The chief additional evidence was that of a Mrs . Hyde , who had washed some shirts for Bacon , one of which was stained apparently with , blood . This witness also stated that Bacon had remarked to her that if his wife said anything about him he-would kill her . He had likewise exhibited great uneasiness , and this had caused her to " have her suspicions" about him in connexion with the murders . Blood has been found on some of Bacon ' s clothes and on Mrs . Bacon ' s dress . Both the prisoners were again remanded .
The Attempted Burglary at Notting-hill . — The two raea dexterously caught by the police last week in their attempt to commit a burglary at Nottinghill have been examined at Marylebone police-office , and sentenced , for that offence and for their assaults on the police , the one to six and the other to two months ' imprisonment . Cetjelty to a Child . —A young man , named Hicknott , has been sentenced by the Clerkenwell magistrate to hard labour for three months for savage ill-treatment of hia illegitimate daughter , aged sixteen months . He admitted to having beaten it with a cane , and said that once it fell on the fire . It presented a mass of frightful injuries . The man was loudly hissed by the people in , court . .
A . Gamekeeper's Morality . — Two gamekeepers , named Woollen and Sims , employed by the West Ardley Game Association , charged two men at the Wakefield Petty Sessions with shooting a hare . The fact of the hare being killed was doubtful ; and the counsel for the defence accused the keepers of getting up charges for the sake of profits , and of having once been poachers themselves . One of the prisoners was fined 1 / . 7 s ., but the other was discharged . Woollen then remarked , " I ' ve got the one I wanted ; " on which one of the magistrates said , "If you were a servant of mine , I would send you off . That expression will be remembered against you in all further evidence you give in this court . "
A Burglar ' s Descent through a Chimney . —A man contrived , about a fortnight ago , to climb on to the roof of a farmer ' s house at Ryton , near Shifnal , Shropshire , by means , probably , of a rope-ladder , and descending a chimney , made his way into tho house , but not without great difficulty in squeezing himself through tho . iron arch plato at the back of tho grate . A fire was burning at the time , though it was night , and the fellow must have got scorched . Moreover , a pistol which he carried went off in the course of his gymnnBtics , and alarmed tho family , who , on rising , could not discover
anything more tho matter than a great simll of soot When , however , eavly in tho morning , a man servant entered tho kitchen , and opened the outer door , to go to tho etablos , the burglar sprang from under a table and rushed forth . Ho was pursued , but ineffectuall y . It does not appear that ho succeeded in stealing anything . A Cab Qukhtion . —A cabman has been 6 ummoncd ° ilt Bow-atreet under poculiar circumstances . Mr . Houston , a silk-morcer of tho Edgoware-roud , hired tlio cab ( which was a Hansom ) on a very rainy , aleoty day , and Bingularly enough , sat with tho window up . Tho cabman requested him to put it down , aa the scat was
getting so wet that he would not be able to take another fare that day , and the property would be damaged ; but Mr . Houghton refused . The driver then declined to take him any further , when Mr . Houghton -told him to drive to Bow-street , which was done . Mr . Jardine took time to consider the question , and on Tuesday he gave his decision for Mr . Houghton , while expressing his opinion that the case was very hard . As he had delayed bis decision , and caused the cabman to come up a second time , he returned him the cost of the
summons . The Bullion Robbery : Decision of the Judges as to the Property . — Mr . Baron Martin and Mr . Justice Willes sat on Tuesday afternoon in the Exchequer Chamber at Westminster , to decide on the right of the several parties claiming the Turkish bonds and other bonds found in the possession of Pierce , Burgess , and Tester . The applicants were—the South Eastern Railway Company , the Sheriffs of London and Middlesex , a Mr . Saward ( an attorney ) , the wife of Tester , and the Crown . The claims of the Sheriffs , Mr . Saward ,
and Mis . Tester , were disallowed . Some further discussion then took place , and eventually the judges made an order that the company should have restored to them so much of the property as was shown to be the result of the robbery , and that the remainder should be given into the custody of Sir Richard Mayne , the Chief Commissioner of Police , to abide any future orders that may be given respecting it . In the course of the proceedings , Mr . Baron Martin expressed his opinion that Fanny Kay has an equitable right to the property , according to the request of Agar .
Clever Identification' of Thieves . —A few nights ago a party of burglars attempted to enter the house of Major Smith , at Woodcroft , near Partick . They first broke a pane of glass in one of the windows , and then tried to wrench open the shutter , by unscrewing the snib with a clasp-knife . The knife , however , was broken in the attempt , and a bell , which was attached to the shutter then rang-, and aroused the master of the house , who , jumping out of bed and arming himself with firearms , rushed to the spot and speedily put the thieves to flight . On examining the -window next morning , a portion of the blade of the knife was found sticking in the shutter , and this circumstance subsequently led to the detection of the burglars . The fragment of the broken knife was given to the police , and it was riot long before a constable saw two suspicious-looking men on his beat , whom le took into custody . At the station-house they were both searched , and on one of them was found a knife with a broken blade , which exactly fitted the piece which had been discovered in the -window-shutter of Major Smith ' s house . The man on whom the knife was found - was a notorious housebreaker . The Convict Thomas Mansell . —This man , formerly & private of the 49 th Regiment , who now lies under sentence of death for shooting a comrade , is respited , as the reader will recollect , to the 5 th of February , for certain technical reasons connected with the trial . The matter will be argued before the Judges of the Court of Queen ' s Bench some time during next term ; but no day is yet fixed . There will be another respite ; and if the Judges should decide that the j ury was not legally empannelled , the convict will be tried again at the next assizes . The Great Bank Frauds . —Anderson and Saward were again examined at the Mansion House on Wednesday , when the chief witness was Mrs . Margaret Ilardwicke , tho wife of William Salt Hardwicke . She was a very respectable-looking elderly woman , and gave evidence to the effect that Saward was intimate with her husband . Tho witness was subjected to a very severe cross-examination by Mr . Giffard , who appeared for Saward , and who sought to show that Mrs . Ilardwicke was well acquainted with her husband ' s dishonest modes of life . This she denied , asserting that , if she had been asked about his employment , she should have said he was ' a gentleman ; ' but it was very evident that she was uot ignorant of his real sources of income . She admitted that ho had been transported , and that once , when he wns about to be tried , she " gave a sum of money to some one , and ho was let out of prison . " She denied that this was ' escaping' from prison , and asked if she was to bo witness against her husband , or against whom . Afterwards she said—qualifying tho information by adding , "I am not certain "—that she gave tho bribe to " some ono belonging to tho gaol . " Further evidence , strengthening tlio prosecution , having been received , tho prisoners were remanded till next Thursday . Juvicnimc 'Nkcessakiics . ' — An action has been brought ngainat Lord Ernest Vane Tempest , of tempestuous notoriety , for 150 J . 19 a . in payment for
jewellery and trinkets supplied to him by Mr . Hancock , the jeweller , of Bond-street . His lordship had the magnanimity to plead ' infancy , ' and thus endeavour to avoid payment . Much fun wus made by Mr . Edwin James , counsel for . Mr . Hancock , in connexion with hia lordship ' s ' ¦ infantine' propensities . Mr . Jamos contended that even « i nfanta' aro liublo for necessaries , and the lneaumg of tho word necessaries , ho aaid , must be defined m . relation to the position in life of tho 'infant , ' Among his lordohip ' s < neccmaries' was a gold latch-key . AH the officers in the regiment to which Lord Ernest
once belonged had their latch-keys of gold , so itisTonT ship must . Another of his necessaries was a lnJw " What is is a locket ? " asked Baron BramwelL S James said that , as he had had a locket once , he cotud answer that question . A locket "is that in which vo put the hair of the lady to whom you are attach ^ * " Then , " said Baron Bramwell , "I have been without a necessary all my life . " Lord Ernest ' s mother the wealthy Marchioness of Londonderry , offered the j ewel ler five shillings in the pound for her son ' s debt but this was not accepted . Mr . Hancock could not prov the delivery of more than 657 . 15 s . worth of goods , owing to the absence of an assistant in Egypt ; and the verdict was therefore given for that amount .
104 The Lead Eb, [No. 358, Saturday
104 THE LEAD EB , [ No . 358 , Saturday
Naval And Military. The American Merchan...
NAVAL AND MILITARY . The American Merchant Navt . —A charge was preferred on Friday week at Liverpool before Mr . Mansfield the stipendiary magistrate , against the first mate of the American ship Albert Gallatin , who , it was alleged during a voyage from New York to England , and particularly while entering the docks on the 11 th inst . treated with great brutality three foreigners , named Muller , Zimmerman , and Zills . These men had been induced to ship oil board the vessel by an advertisement issued in New York , which stated that a passage to Liverpool and twenty dollars a month would be given to landsmen and others , who would be expected only to perform landsmen ' s duty on . board . The mate was fined in one case 5 / . and costs , and in the other two cases 40 s . and costs . The Wkeck of theTyne . —The endeavour to pump the water out of theTyne steamship , which ran aground on the south coast , has failed , and there appears now to be little chance of getting her off . The attempt has been abandoned until the weather shall be calmer . Resistance to the Lash . —A ' very unpleasant occurence took place on Monday at Portsmouth . A man who has only been one hundred and ninety-five days in the Royal Marine Artillery corps , aud been confined several times for bad conduct , incurred a debt of 8 s . for slops he had " taken up ;' this sum . the captain of his company said should be put against his account on the books of
the corps , whereupon the man used an . insulting expression , and said he would do no more soldiering until he was paid . This led to a court-martial last Friday-week , which adjudged him to receive fifty lashes on Monday . On his being taken towards the place of punishment under escort , he broke a-way from his guards , rushed upon Colonel Parke ( the commandant of the corps ) as he was stooping to pick up a paper he had dropped , and gave him a tremendous blow in the face , knocking him to the ground and cutting him ia the face very severely . The man was speedily overpowered and led to the halberds , where the fifty lashes were inflicted . He will now be tried for striking the colonel . — Times .
Wreck in the Channel . —The Marian , for Antigua , owned by the Mayor of Liverpool , ran ashore on Sunday in Rhos Bay . She is in a very dangerous position ; but hopes are entertained that she will be got off . The Bkoadstairs Boatmen . —An amateur theatrical performance is to take place at the St . James ' s Theatre , on the 7 th or the 9 th of February , for the benefit of those brave men , tha Broadstairs boatmen . The New " Dreadnought . "—The new hospital ship Caledonia , which is to supply the ' place of the old Dreadnought at Greenwich , was on Monday lashed alongside the latter vessel , which will be shortly removed and broken up . The Caledonia will then receive the name of tho Dreadnought .
The Mail . Steamer Violet . —The identity of the passenger lost in the Dover and Ostend mail packet Violet has now teen proved . It is now satisfactorily ascertained that the deceased was a Prussian Baron von Issing , captain of the 7 th company of the 15 th regiment of infantry , in garrison at Minden . This officar obtained leave of absence to go over to London on family affairs , taking with him 500 dollars in cash , aud bills to tho amount of 2 O 00 dollars . His wife is the sister of Sophie Cruvelli , now Baroness Vigier . This Mortality on Board tub Duke of Portland . —The Local Marine Board , sitting in Cornhill , have been investigating tho frightful mortality of Chinese on board the British ship Duke of Portland . Every care appears to have been taken on board , and a larger number of men were not shipped than the vessel
was built to hold . Nevertheless , tho coolies were discontented , behaved in a very mutinous manner , plotted a general massacre , and wexe only overawed by a great oxhibition of firearms . Several suicides -were committed , and fever raged fearfully . At the close of tho examination of the witnesses , the Chairman announced the decision of tho board : — " That no blame attaches to tho owner and master , or ainy ono connected with the Bhip . That Captain Seymour's conduct to tho emigrants appears to have boon kind and attentive , and that every possible precaution wus used by him to decrease tlio mortality . Dr . Ludgate appears also to have exerted himself for tho sumo purpose . It appears to this board that tho mortality was greatly aggravated by the great heat and unusual length of tho pannage ( 150 days ) , cauaod by tho sailing of tho ship in an improper aeaaon . She aailcd fully ono month later than
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Citation
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Leader (1850-1860), Jan. 31, 1857, page 8, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/l/issues/cld_31011857/page/8/
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